Monterey Herald

State passes 2 million COVID-19 cases

‘Pick up your phone right now. Cancel any gathering with people who do not live with you.’

- Sy Nico Savidge and riona Kelliher nsavidge@bayareanew­sgroup.com and fkelliher@bayareanew­sgroup. com

It has taken less than six weeks to see 1 million cases of COVID-19 arise in the state of California.

It took more than nine months for California to record 1 million confirmed cases of COVID-19.

It has taken less than six weeks to see 1 million more.

Once regarded as a model for stopping the spread of COVID-19,

California on Wednesday passed 2 million recorded cases of the deadly illness, reaching the milestone as Christmas approaches in the midst of the darkest and most dangerous days of the pandemic.

Hundreds of people are dying from the virus in California each day. A crush of new patients is threatenin­g to overwhelm hospitals. Even as vaccinatio­ns begin rolling out more widely and local health officials cling to signs in testing data that this devastatin­g surge of the virus may be cresting, they are bracing for more deaths and fear that Christmas and New Year’s, like Thanksgivi­ng before them, will fuel another devastatin­g surge of cases as people unwittingl­y spread the virus among their friends and family members.

“Our hospitals are at the brink — just about to be pushed over,” said Dr. Ahmad Kamal, director of health care preparedne­ss for

Santa Clara County, where just 35 intensive care unit beds remained available Tuesday. “Pick up your phone right now. Cancel any gathering with people who do not live with you.

“Please,” Kamal added, “I implore you.”

More than 2.5 percent of California’s 39.5 million residents have tested positive for COVID-19 within the past six weeks.

California recorded its millionth coronaviru­s case on Nov. 12, according to data compiled by this news organizati­on; it likely hit that mark sooner, but limited testing especially in the pandemic’s early days meant many cases were never officially confirmed.

Forty- one days later, data assembled from local public health offices showed the state pushed past the 2 million case mark late Wednesday afternoon, with some

counties yet to report their daily totals.

On Nov. 12, the state was averaging just under 7,000 new coronaviru­s cases per day, and just over 4,000 people were being treated for the virus in hospitals. By Tuesday, California was averaging more than 45,000 cases per day over the past week, and the number of COVID patients in hospitals had climbed past 19,000. More patients are

being treated for COVID-19 in California’s hospitals today than were hospitaliz­ed during the spring peak of the virus in New York.

Just 1.1 percent of beds in intensive care units across California were available as of Wednesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom said. In the hardhit Central Valley, San Joaquin County health officials reported all ICUs were operating at or above their licensed capacity.

California’s Community Vaccine Advisory Committee met Wednesday to continue the debate over how the state should distribute the millions of doses of COVID-19 vaccine it expects to receive over the coming months. Health care workers began receiving the vaccine last week. Residents and staff in nursing homes and assisted living facilities are expected to receive it over the coming days and weeks.

The state has zeroed in on three categories of frontline employees — educators, first responders and essential workers in the farm and grocery industries — to be next in line. Officials are now weighing whether to add people who are 75 and older to this group.

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